ist the true Nature and Being of
God. It was also to effect the reconciliation of men to God. To
accomplish this purpose the great obstructing barrier of sin had to be
broken down. The means chosen, in the infinite wisdom of God, was the
Death of Jesus Christ upon the Cross. By this supreme act of
self-sacrifice He opened to men the way of reconciliation to God, and
became their Saviour from the dreadful power of sin, which by
themselves they could not and cannot overcome. It should also be
remembered that in speaking of this sublime subject we are dealing with
a mystery, which it is beyond human power fully to explain, and that
for that reason no really adequate theory of the Atonement can be set
forth. But of the fact there is no doubt. The experience of countless
men and women has proven conclusively the saving power of the Cross.
When they have accepted that sacrifice made for the sins of men, and
have taken Christ into their lives, the predominant feeling is that
their sins have been forgiven. And the fact that it is through
Christ's sacrifice, and not by anything they themselves have done or
could do, that they have won pardon, so far from lowering their moral
sense as might be expected, in that they are simply benefiting by the
action of another, invariably on the contrary makes a profound
impression on both life and character, enabling them through the
resulting loyalty and devotion to Christ to reach a standard of life
and conduct much beyond that which had previously satisfied them.
THE RESURRECTION OF CHRIST
That Christ rose from the dead on the third day has been from the very
beginning the unquestioned belief of the Christian Church. It is the
main theme of the first Christian sermon ever produced, that by Peter
on the day of Pentecost. The Gospel records are perfectly plain as to
the nature of Christ's Resurrection. He rose from the grave in His
complete Personality, spiritual and bodily, though His risen body was
free from certain limitations of pre-resurrection life. It was the
same body as His disciples had known before His death. Of this He bade
them assure themselves by actual contact. That He rose from the dead
in His human as well as in His divine nature is the guarantee that we
men can share in His resurrection. "Even so in Christ shall all be
made alive".
As to the exact nature of our own Resurrection body, naturally it is
not possible to speak with exact certainty. Yet it
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